A courageous NYPD officer saved the life of a distressed Queens woman with a gun in her hand as Tropical Storm Fay raged over New York City.
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Blom and his partner located the 47-year-old woman, who remains anonymous, close to her home in the passenger seat of her car. “Because of the storm it was hard to see [inside],” said Blom, who approached the car alone, adding that he could nonetheless make out a firearm in the despondent woman’s hand.
“She’s crying,” the officer recalled, “and below the window line you can see the gun. I just froze for a moment.”
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The 16-year NYPD veteran admitted feeling nervous but knew that it was his duty to intervene. Blom tapped on the window of the woman’s car and asked if he could get an opportunity to speak with her.
“If we can just talk, I would love to be able to help you,” Blom recalled asking. The woman, who works in law enforcement but not for the NYPD, accepted Blom’s request. She let her attention drift from the weapon in her hand as Blom opened the opposite car door and sat behind the wheel.
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Seconds later, the woman was in tears in the officer’s arms.
Then after a few moments, he put his hand on top of the gun so that he could prevent her from firing it in case she were to try to pull the trigger at any time.
She then agreed to undergo a medical evaluation and willingly gave up the gun. The compassionate officer stayed with the 47-year-old, having talked her away from the brink of despair until her ambulance arrived.
“Before she left, I tapped on the ambulance’s glass,” said Blom. “I waved at her and told her I’ll check in on her. She said, ‘Thank you.’”
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“[He] found her, took his time listening, talked to her with compassion, & ultimately ended up removing the gun she pointed at herself, saving her life & getting her help,” the police chief explained, sharing Blom’s kind actions with the community.
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“Tomorrow can be a brand-new day for her,” he said.